no they used mg42
which fires an 8mm cartridge which is similar to the american 30/06 cartridge......
No, their machine guns fired the 8mm round (similar to 30/06)........
Auto ordnance used to but i do not know if they still do.
.303 caliber machine guns mounted in the wings. Later models replaced those with 20mm Hispano-Suiza cannons.
No
The typical rifle bullet was .303 inch caliber. The same round was used in most of the light machine guns.
they had guns
45 caliber Machine Gun and 50 caliber machine gun
7.62 mm (or 30 caliber) and 5.56 mm (or 223 caliber) are common rifle cartridges. Pistols, machine guns, and artillery will of course be different from these.
.50 caliber Browning machine guns. A LOT of them!
.45 caliber Thompson Sub Machine Guns = Tommy Gun
.50 caliber machine guns, unguided rockets, and unguided bombs.
The highest caliber machine gun in standard use is the .50 Cal. Gatling guns are used in 20mm caliber. XXXXXXXXX Russia and China use a heavy machine gun larger than the .50 cal BMG- it is the Vladmirov KDV (for the Russians), in caliber 14.5mm x 115.
A pair of M2 .50 caliber machine guns.
Auto ordnance used to but i do not know if they still do.
Yes, and machine guns, and pistols, and bombs, and shells, and tanks, and other weapons of war.
.303 caliber machine guns mounted in the wings. Later models replaced those with 20mm Hispano-Suiza cannons.
because the Nazis sat in the bunkers with heavy machine guns and mines in the field
In April 1935, the armament was changed from two .303 caliber (7.7 mm) Vickers machine guns in each wing to four .303 caliber (7.7 mm) Brownings. in both cases the weapons were fully automatic.